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The slim, premium-feeling Acer Aspire S7 was one of the very first Windows 8 laptops I spent a significant amount of time with in the weeks before the official release of Windows 8. My colleagues and I agreed at the time that this 13-inch touch-screen laptop was an excellent advertisement for Microsoft's new OS, but our demo unit was preproduction hardware, and not ready for benchmark tests. Now, with a final consumer-ready version of the same machine in-hand, we can report performance and battery life test results and give this excellent laptop a review score.

In hands-on use, this Aspire S7 looked and felt identical to the preproduction sample from October 2012. Like many of the laptops and convertible laptop/tablet hybrids we've reviewed recently, the Aspire S7 is a new-from-the-ground-up ultrabook, rather than an existing Windows 7 product updated with new software. The S7 is also one of the thinnest, slickest-looking ultrabooks I've seen, highlighted by a white minimalist chassis and a lid covered with Gorilla Glass (much like the HP Envy Spectre). Inside is an Intel Core i7 CPU and something that has already become almost commonplace in Windows 8 laptops: a touch screen, built into a 13.3-inch 1,920x1,080-pixel display.

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In Windows 8, with its tile-based interface and support for new and varied gestures, the touch screen becomes a useful secondary tool, as seen here, or in systems such as the Dell XPS 12 or Lenovo Yoga. It's not something you'll use every time, but after a few days, you'll find yourself reaching for it more and more, usually for a quick swipe or to scroll up and down long Web pages.

While the hardware and design of the Aspire S7 is definitely premium, it's a tough sell at $1,649, especially with touch-screen Windows 8 laptops available for as little as $529. An Intel Core i5 version of the S7 is available for a more reasonable $1,399, and your sizable investment gets you a 1080p display, a 256GB SSD, and that excellent touch screen.

Design and features
The Acer Aspire S7 is one of the sharpest-looking laptops of 2012. It's incredibly thin and light, although the glass-covered lid makes it a bit top-heavy. The HP Envy Spectre had a similar glass-heavy design, putting glass on the back of the lid and the wrist rest. Here the wrist rest is thankfully glass-free.

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The rest of the body is aluminum. Acer calls it a unibody chassis, much as Apple does, which means the base of it is carved from a single block of material. Its materials and coloring are different from a MacBook, but there's a certain stylistic similarity. However, it's unique enough to provide ample evidence that Apple does not have a monopoly on sharp high-end laptop designs. Several of my colleagues have walked by, seen the S7, and have been very impressed -- that's a very useful metric in an office filled with jaded reporters who see every tech device under the sun. Then again, for $1,600, this had better be an impressive piece of hardware.

The keyboard has flat-topped, island-style keys, but it's hampered by extremely shallow key depth. I found myself making a lot of typing mistakes, because I had a hard time figuring out on the fly if each keystroke had registered. It's a long-standing issue with many of the thinnest ultrabooks (and a few not-so-thin ones). While it didn't make the keyboard unusable, this was not my favorite typing experience in recent memory.

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The touch pad is a decent size for such a small laptop, but it's not among the most responsive I've tried. It's an Elan touch pad, rather than one from Synaptics, a company we've spoken to extensively about its ambitious Windows 8 touch-pad hardware and software plans. I found myself reaching for the touch screen more often than I might have because of the sluggish response.

The optimal way to interact with a Windows 8 laptop such as the Aspire S7 is through a combination of the keyboard, touch pad, and touch screen. It's a concept rarely seen before that has surprisingly become standard for Windows 8 laptops almost overnight, with touch models from Dell, HP, Acer, Asus, Toshiba, Sony, Lenovo, and others. It's too early to tell if this will be the new standard for all laptops, but so far we've seen only a handful of review samples without a touch screen, and prices have come down below $600 for basic models with Intel Core i3 CPUs and touch screens. If it can be added without a significant cost increase, I suspect a touch screen may be the new normal in 2013.

To be fair, it may be that the touch screen seems like the optimal way to interact with Windows 8 because touch-pad and keyboard controls are so incredibly counterintuitive. Swapping among programs, viewing all the programs you have open, and even switching among Web browser tabs are all a hassle in Windows 8, unless you have a touch screen, in which case a simple flick performs most basic system navigation tasks. The touch pad can mimic those moves, but it's not nearly as easy to do.

I found myself, without much deliberate planning, reaching out and using the touch screen for some tasks, while using the touch pad and keyboard for others. Having a touch screen on a laptop isn't a necessity, but having consumers trained for years now with smartphones and tablets, it's a much more natural interaction than it would have been in previous generations of hardware.

Helping solve one particular touch-screen laptop issue I've encountered before, the Aspire S7 screen hinge acts as one would expect from the closed position to about 120 degrees or so. After that, the hinge stiffens considerably. The end result: tapping and swiping on the screen while the laptop is open does not result in as much shaking or movement as you would expect. The screen also opens up to a full 180 degrees, allowing the system to lie completely flat, not that that's the kind of thing you would normally do.

The screen itself has a full 1,920x1,080-pixel resolution, which is a great premium feature to have on a 13-inch laptop, and at least part of the reason this system is so expensive. Many PC makers have told me that adding touch to an ultrabook screen will add some thickness, but in this case, the lid still seems very thin, with decent off-axis viewing and a screen that's glossy, but not overly reflective.

Acer Aspire S7

Average for category [13-inch]

Video

Micro-HDMI

HDMI or DisplayPort

Audio

Stereo speakers, combo headphone/mic jack

Stereo speakers, headphone/mic jacks

Networking

802.11n Wi-Fi, Bluetooth

Ethernet, 802.11n Wi-Fi, Bluetooth

Optical drive

None

DVD burner

Connectivity and performance
With such a small laptop, it's inevitable that some features get skipped or otherwise compromised. In this case, it's the video output, which consists of a single Micro-HDMI port. You'll need an adapter to use it, whether you're sending the signal to an HDMI device or converting it for a VGA input. Besides that, you get two USB 3.0 ports and an SD card slot, which makes the S7 passable, but not particularly impressive, for connectivity.

Dan Ackerman leads CNET's coverage of laptops, desktops, and Windows tablets, while also writing about games, gadgets, and other topics. A former radio DJ and member of Mensa, he's written about music and technology for more than 15 years, appearing in publications including Spin, Blender, and Men's Journal.
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